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Sep 8, 2013
09/13
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of the entire roosevelt era. the library research room is consistently one of the busiest of all the presidential libraries, and this year's group of authors reflects a wide variety of research that is done here. at me quickly go over the format for the festival's concurrent sessions. the top of each hour session begins with a 30-minute opera talk followed by a 10-minute question and answer session and then we will wrap up after that. in the authors will move to the tables in the lobby outside of the new deal store where you can purchase their books and have the author simon. the top of the our the process repeats itself. today's attendees can go to the new museum and take a look at the wonderful new exhibit that we have there with all local red admonished to five admission bunt. if you want to ask a question to come up to the microphone we will have the questions and answers from there. now it is my pleasure to introduce cheryl mullenbach who is the author of "double victory: how african american women brok race
of the entire roosevelt era. the library research room is consistently one of the busiest of all the presidential libraries, and this year's group of authors reflects a wide variety of research that is done here. at me quickly go over the format for the festival's concurrent sessions. the top of each hour session begins with a 30-minute opera talk followed by a 10-minute question and answer session and then we will wrap up after that. in the authors will move to the tables in the lobby outside...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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roosevelt's press conference the association. a few women, a peppery, feminist correspondence who was close to the press conference in a circle five men should be admitted on grounds of fairness. eleanor said no, claiming and would force her to encroach on my husband's side of the news. no, i must move on here because our time is running short. of want to bring up the question, did these press conferences in hansel and was on career as a journalist. well, we know that she started writing her most famous journalistic endeavor, the my day, at the end of 1935. it continued almost up until the day she died in 1962 found there were the professionals. there were willing to overlook it were to write about it positively. but as time went on, this column became very important. it was one of the most widely syndicated columns of the day. eleanor make money at it. the women go a little bit jealous. for example, the press conference group was rather annoyed when she used the might a column to break stories that otherwise might have come out
roosevelt's press conference the association. a few women, a peppery, feminist correspondence who was close to the press conference in a circle five men should be admitted on grounds of fairness. eleanor said no, claiming and would force her to encroach on my husband's side of the news. no, i must move on here because our time is running short. of want to bring up the question, did these press conferences in hansel and was on career as a journalist. well, we know that she started writing her...
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Aug 18, 2013
08/13
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[applause] >> this program was part of the 2013 roosevelt reading festival hosted by the franklin d roosevelt presidential library in hyde park new york. for more information visit fdrlibrary.marist.edu. >>> michael stan to be talking about his book "the prince of providence ." >> it is a story of our longest serving mayor in rhode island history. one of the more colorful mayors you'll find anywhere in the country. he was part tony soprano. he was a lovable guy who helped transform the industrialial city of providence to a city that was rated one of america's most liveable by a number of publications, and he also presided over a beth -- breathtaking arrayed much corruption over three decades that landed anymore federal president. he's a very colorful character. i called him america's -- he would be -- so police officer by the side. he would have a cup of vodka in one hand and a cigarette in the other hand. and, you know, the key to the city and mayor on there in the trunk of the car. en-- when i set out to write a book about him. he was to be the embodiment of american politics the good and t
[applause] >> this program was part of the 2013 roosevelt reading festival hosted by the franklin d roosevelt presidential library in hyde park new york. for more information visit fdrlibrary.marist.edu. >>> michael stan to be talking about his book "the prince of providence ." >> it is a story of our longest serving mayor in rhode island history. one of the more colorful mayors you'll find anywhere in the country. he was part tony soprano. he was a lovable guy...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 15, 2013
10/13
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WHUT
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and the government has never been reshaped since franklin dell know roosevelt. we have moved the power away from the executive into the legislative body. and no legislative body runs government on a daley basis. there has to be a sharing of a responsibility, what the responsibilities are. and that's why you diminish the power of the executive office. >> and why we see so much dysfunction and gridlock. >> right. and that's what's happening. the board of directors cannot run a company everyday. it's impossible. >> in the case of chicago, you've been out for two years and rob i am moon wall, the former chief of staff, a famous figure in his own right and from a dine nasty in his own respect, is now your successor. have you had a hard time keeping your hands off? and i don't mean doing his job for him, but more social security a public opinion about the success or failure -- >> no. once i left office -- i'm known recall for many years. i said i love the city. i'm just a citizen. i don't comment, i don't appear with him at any event, with the exception of my wife who
and the government has never been reshaped since franklin dell know roosevelt. we have moved the power away from the executive into the legislative body. and no legislative body runs government on a daley basis. there has to be a sharing of a responsibility, what the responsibilities are. and that's why you diminish the power of the executive office. >> and why we see so much dysfunction and gridlock. >> right. and that's what's happening. the board of directors cannot run a company...
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Jul 22, 2013
07/13
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lincoln and roosevelt. the genesis of this book goes back to some of my research into those presidents because i had rushmore, i ut mt. had to understand what the american understanding of those presidents was. >> what have you done between then and now? wrote one book between now and then. th o set in the late 19 century. a book called in a far country a man s about a couple, nd woman who go up to the bering strait of alaska to bring civilization to the eskimos who there. it's quite an adventure story to researcht of fun because i got to sfend a lot of time in the wild country and go ice.to the >> where are you from originally? native of baltimore. married a texan, moved to austin 30 plus years ago. have a summer house in montana where i go when it gets too hot in texas. >> what else have you done efore you got in the book writing business? >> a recovering journalist. orked for several different magazines. last stop was "newsweek" before you knew me. been 20 years and now newsweek is no more. >> back to jo
lincoln and roosevelt. the genesis of this book goes back to some of my research into those presidents because i had rushmore, i ut mt. had to understand what the american understanding of those presidents was. >> what have you done between then and now? wrote one book between now and then. th o set in the late 19 century. a book called in a far country a man s about a couple, nd woman who go up to the bering strait of alaska to bring civilization to the eskimos who there. it's quite an...
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Jul 22, 2013
07/13
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neither roosevelt nor hay said this out loud, but hay almost became a father figure to roosevelt. age? >> exactly 20 years apart. >> that church is now known as the church of presidents. let me ask you this. you read the 10 volumes. did you read the diary? >> hay's? >> yes. >> my goodness. >> how much is in there? >> you always wish for more, there are large gaps in it, but it is so genuine, so real to have somebody that was living at close to lincoln making these observations. the most daunting aspect of the book was, ok, i'm going to have to write about lincoln. believe me, plenty of people have come before me. if you were staging a play, you have lincoln in the room, nobody will look at the other actors. what i chose to do was killed lincoln off in the first page and bring him back as john hay's lincoln. the reader realizes that so much of what we recognize and know about lincoln was given to us from john hay, also in the autobiographies, but mostly these snippets. poet,ay saw himself as a writer. he realized he was a writer in the presence of greatness. the descriptions of lin
neither roosevelt nor hay said this out loud, but hay almost became a father figure to roosevelt. age? >> exactly 20 years apart. >> that church is now known as the church of presidents. let me ask you this. you read the 10 volumes. did you read the diary? >> hay's? >> yes. >> my goodness. >> how much is in there? >> you always wish for more, there are large gaps in it, but it is so genuine, so real to have somebody that was living at close to lincoln...
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Jan 15, 2013
01/13
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LINKTV
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roosevelt was as well. he repeatedly told his son, we are not going to be played as a good time charlie as we were in world war i. >> he also campaigned with african americans at a time of jim crow, and went to africa. >> he was shocked. he said the british empire said these people back a hundred years. >> you made the movie born on the fourth of july. you made platoon. and now have written the untold history of the united states and done a showtime series. what is most important, do you feel, that has not been told in the past and maybe even in your films? the bomb, youith obam can work your way through the eisenhower years. he was a benign face, but their foreign policy starts a parade of intervention that is criminal. and he gets away with it. he builds up our arsenal of 30,000 nuclear warheads. >> p p e has one finger on the button when he takes off -- he has one finger on the button when he takes office. a dozen fingers when he leaves. >> he puts us in vietnam. he financed 80% of it. he was definitely
roosevelt was as well. he repeatedly told his son, we are not going to be played as a good time charlie as we were in world war i. >> he also campaigned with african americans at a time of jim crow, and went to africa. >> he was shocked. he said the british empire said these people back a hundred years. >> you made the movie born on the fourth of july. you made platoon. and now have written the untold history of the united states and done a showtime series. what is most...
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Jul 22, 2013
07/13
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roosevelt." >> john taliaferro, when did you decide to spend a lot of time with john hay, and who was he? delicioused he was a subject for a biography when it dawned on me that he had been, not only at abraham lincoln's bedside immediately after his assassination, but also at the bedside of william mckinley in 1901. i thought, who could this below be? theourse, when i opened archives, i realized with a rich subject it was. john hay, his life really has two bookends at either end of his biographical shelf. there is lincoln on one end, he was his private secretary, lived in the white house for every war years. so much of what we know about techoln come from hay's with him. he served on the mckinley as well and was secretary of state for teddy roosevelt, so you have these iconic bookends in american history, and then when you look deeper, you realize all the chapters in between, from the civil war to the beginning of the 20th-century, he is a presence in every one of those chapters. his fingerprint
roosevelt." >> john taliaferro, when did you decide to spend a lot of time with john hay, and who was he? delicioused he was a subject for a biography when it dawned on me that he had been, not only at abraham lincoln's bedside immediately after his assassination, but also at the bedside of william mckinley in 1901. i thought, who could this below be? theourse, when i opened archives, i realized with a rich subject it was. john hay, his life really has two bookends at either end of...
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Jun 5, 2013
06/13
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roosevelt leftwich has more. >> reporter: they don't think much about that. in fact, many mom that is work and those who don't say when you take a look at whatever he says and even if he tries to clone it up, it's a knock against women. many women said they do like the fact tell get to stay at home with their kids. women or still working with children say it's all about balance. you can do it all if you're organized. working or not working is determined by economic need. >> it makes education better when i have money to pay their tuition. >> they're doing a grate job raising their kids -- great job raising their kids. >> reporter: what about the dads? studies have found that dads are important. the stay at home dads have increased 30%. this topic is blowing up on our website. while many are commenting on this, about 55% of you say, no, it doesn't have an impact. yes. some women say its did have an impact. put in your two cents at our website, abc2news.com. >>> the current conversation doesn't end there. procter & gamble is backing down from an ad some say is
roosevelt leftwich has more. >> reporter: they don't think much about that. in fact, many mom that is work and those who don't say when you take a look at whatever he says and even if he tries to clone it up, it's a knock against women. many women said they do like the fact tell get to stay at home with their kids. women or still working with children say it's all about balance. you can do it all if you're organized. working or not working is determined by economic need. >> it makes...
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Feb 9, 2013
02/13
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as franklin delano roosevelt said, "never before have we had so little time in which to do so much." today, i'd like to share my vision of the path ahead. i know that to achieve this vision we must all work together. democrat and republican, house and senate, east and west, to answer the challenges of our age. i have represented both sides of our state, first as a state representative from yakima valley, then in congress representing both eastern and western washington. i want to thank the people of washington for electing me your governor. i am truly humbled to represent all of washington, and to deliver the change in olympia you asked for last november. now i would like to do something very difficult to do as a university of washington husky, and that is to honor a washington state cougar. i would like to introduce all of you to my wife of 40 years, trudi inslee. we met at ingraham high school and raised our family in a century-old farmhouse in the yakima valley. i'd also like you to meet my three boys and their families, connor, joe, jack and his wife megan, our grandson brody, an
as franklin delano roosevelt said, "never before have we had so little time in which to do so much." today, i'd like to share my vision of the path ahead. i know that to achieve this vision we must all work together. democrat and republican, house and senate, east and west, to answer the challenges of our age. i have represented both sides of our state, first as a state representative from yakima valley, then in congress representing both eastern and western washington. i want to...
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Jan 20, 2013
01/13
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two of the roosevelt children were at the table. it was just a wednesday night, you know, at home with the roosevelts. nothing special. and after dinner the gentlemen retired to talk about race, but the dinner itself was just, you know, a family evening that was taking place, you know, at tables all over america, the same kind of thing. but at this table, you know, there was a hot seat. >> final question, what was on the menu? >> the menu has not been recorded, but roosevelt loved hot food and plenty of it. so probably hominy, biscuits, you know, comfort food as we know it today. >> deborah davis is the author of "guest of honor: booker t. washington, theodore roosevelt and the white house dinner that shocked a nation." thank you. >> thank you. >> now, from the 2012 miami book fair international held annually on the campus of miami-dade college, a panel on american history featuring candice millard, david nassau and les standford. it's about 45 minutes. .. >> we can visit there, we been trying to learn the customs, we can translate
two of the roosevelt children were at the table. it was just a wednesday night, you know, at home with the roosevelts. nothing special. and after dinner the gentlemen retired to talk about race, but the dinner itself was just, you know, a family evening that was taking place, you know, at tables all over america, the same kind of thing. but at this table, you know, there was a hot seat. >> final question, what was on the menu? >> the menu has not been recorded, but roosevelt loved...
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Jul 5, 2013
07/13
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, teddy roosevelt. i'm a big fan of theodore roosevelt, his energy and his style and also i've got one that deals mainly with his time down in south america. what should be interesting. >> let us know what you reading this summer. tweet us at the booktv, posted on her facebook page or send us an e-mail at booktv@c-span.org. >> the old adage if you want, visible, you want to move the mass, you've got to move the chief is going to change the have you got to change it first. there's never been strong incentive for focus on the issue of information technology, technology generally. is not lost on any of us that the last group of people they're going to come in and advocate in a budget crisis for technology over health care, or offer programs for seniors, don't exist. people don't line up with stickers but they don't line up in buses coming down this ago or state government demanding more information technology. and so the challenge for governmental leaders is to realize its potential and its possibility. an
, teddy roosevelt. i'm a big fan of theodore roosevelt, his energy and his style and also i've got one that deals mainly with his time down in south america. what should be interesting. >> let us know what you reading this summer. tweet us at the booktv, posted on her facebook page or send us an e-mail at booktv@c-span.org. >> the old adage if you want, visible, you want to move the mass, you've got to move the chief is going to change the have you got to change it first. there's...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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beyond washington was a piece i think the roosevelt -- teddy roosevelt. that's mainly the freshness of the painting. so it's by sergeant. and he's turn iing to something. it's a proud serious strong stance. and from my memory, i think it was a struggle on the -- trying to get the composition right and the artist was having a hard time dealing with the president. at some point, he was walking down the stairs and ordered him to stop. and that was the moment that he found the pose. that is kind of how it happens with portraits. live with the person a little bit. try to discover what they're like. try to find what portrays them properly. specifically with the first ladies. portraits for that one. >> the one i love, the painting. i was surprised at the scale. it was nancy reagan. i know a lot of -- there was -- i remember vaguely at the time, there was buildup to what she could possibly be wearing and things like that. in the end, it was a very sleek red dress. so nothing truly extravagant. the lighting and a dark setting where you can see light coming in the
beyond washington was a piece i think the roosevelt -- teddy roosevelt. that's mainly the freshness of the painting. so it's by sergeant. and he's turn iing to something. it's a proud serious strong stance. and from my memory, i think it was a struggle on the -- trying to get the composition right and the artist was having a hard time dealing with the president. at some point, he was walking down the stairs and ordered him to stop. and that was the moment that he found the pose. that is kind of...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 11, 2013
12/13
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the commission and the they asked them to slow down and they regroup and i think that elder roosevelt said it best, and have you to do one thing a day that makes you scared. and i think that this probably makes a lot of people scared when you think about this but i really want to hear from rick, because he is the team leader of this. he is bringing the vision of the owners and they have recreated themself and trying to advice the citizens and the advisory committee on how we make this work and be the good citizen and how do we make this work? and now we have to ask ourselves, san francisco has a marquee name and we have a world class cruise terminal. how can san francisco not have a world class basketball, and it is more than basketball, it is for the whole area. >> people will be coming from everywhere and for myself, i am liking what i am hearing and i hope that corinegets up and talked and rick i need to talk to you, you are the boss. i had to put you on there. and about six months, rick and so if i have seen you and your team here you have regrouped and come back. and could you te
the commission and the they asked them to slow down and they regroup and i think that elder roosevelt said it best, and have you to do one thing a day that makes you scared. and i think that this probably makes a lot of people scared when you think about this but i really want to hear from rick, because he is the team leader of this. he is bringing the vision of the owners and they have recreated themself and trying to advice the citizens and the advisory committee on how we make this work and...
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Nov 18, 2013
11/13
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what happened between roosevelt and taft. why did you having written about roosevelt decide you wanted to expand the book to include the relationship and ultimately the role of the muck rakers. >> it happens i choose these subjects about others written because they are the most interesting in history and so you need your own angle. when i discovered 400 letters from taft and teddy and great friends when they were younger. so the break in 1912 was much more emotional and heartbreaking than i knew, that became the second strand of the story. taft and the friendship. i began to realize the reason teddy was successful and taft fell short teddy understood how to use the bully pulpit, have remarkable relationships with the press and he did not. that's where muck rakers came in, vanguard of progressive reform at the time. >> so many things fascinate me. of course velt and taft got to know each other during the harrison, roosevelt becomes president after the assassination and pulls taft back in. he wants him to be almost a deputy pre
what happened between roosevelt and taft. why did you having written about roosevelt decide you wanted to expand the book to include the relationship and ultimately the role of the muck rakers. >> it happens i choose these subjects about others written because they are the most interesting in history and so you need your own angle. when i discovered 400 letters from taft and teddy and great friends when they were younger. so the break in 1912 was much more emotional and heartbreaking than...
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Dec 13, 2013
12/13
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roosevelt. on december 21, 1941, two weeks after america was attacked, as president roosevelt said, a day which will live in infamy, franklin roosevelt delivered this message. president roosevelt said, sincere and faithful men and women are asking themselves this christmas, how can we light our trees? how can we give our gifts? how can we meet and worship with love and with uplifted spirit and heart in a world at war? a world of fighting and suffering and death. a day, we pause even for even for christmas day, in our urgent labor of arming a decent humanity against the enemies which beset it. how can we put the world aside as men and women put the world aside in peaceful years to ejoice in the birth of christ? president roosevelt goes on, he says, looking into the days to come, i have set aside a day of prayer and in that proclamation i have said, quote, the year 1941 has brought upon our nation a war of aggression by powers dominated by arrogant rulers whose selfish purpose is to destroy free i
roosevelt. on december 21, 1941, two weeks after america was attacked, as president roosevelt said, a day which will live in infamy, franklin roosevelt delivered this message. president roosevelt said, sincere and faithful men and women are asking themselves this christmas, how can we light our trees? how can we give our gifts? how can we meet and worship with love and with uplifted spirit and heart in a world at war? a world of fighting and suffering and death. a day, we pause even for even...
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Nov 19, 2013
11/13
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. >>> plus, hear how teddy roosevelt saved football. now grassy knoll in dallas became an icon for conspiracy theories. it's a history trifecta this morning where you can find 11 presidents. good morning from washington. tuesday, novrp 19th, 2013. the only place actually we think now you'll hear from 12 different presidents on television in today's one-hour show. document them all. >>> the dow broke 16000 for the first time monday as it clo, had there but probably will this week. five years after economic collapse, a recovery of the haves and the have-nots. the dow finished the day at 15,976 after flirting with that 16,000 mark throughout the day. the s&p topped 1,800 before slipping slightly back to close under that mark. the record-setting closes, though, have prompted this tweet from former white house senior adviser david plouffe. dow jones industrial average 16,000 plus by november 18th, 2013. that terrible socialist, barack obama. but that was obviously a shot at big business and the idea that the president is not business friendl
. >>> plus, hear how teddy roosevelt saved football. now grassy knoll in dallas became an icon for conspiracy theories. it's a history trifecta this morning where you can find 11 presidents. good morning from washington. tuesday, novrp 19th, 2013. the only place actually we think now you'll hear from 12 different presidents on television in today's one-hour show. document them all. >>> the dow broke 16000 for the first time monday as it clo, had there but probably will this...
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Apr 6, 2013
04/13
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let's start with sara delano roosevelt. >> a dominant woman, sara delano roosevelt. and in that picture, you can see that she's with her daughter-in-law elnor and with franklin. they were on their way to vote. now, they all looked smiley, but the tensions between sara and her daughter-in-law were there from the beginning, and they never were resolved. that was the most prickly relationship between mother and daughter-in-law. but she was such a dominant woman. put her whole life into her son franklin. did not expect him or even particularly want him to go into politics as an arith contract i can hudson river grand dame. she rather thought politics was beneath the delanos and the roosevelts. but once he got into it, she wanted him to win and actually participated in his campaign in a minor way, which that was the first person who ever did, a first mother who ever did, yes. >> why didn't the eleanor-sara relationship work? >> sara could not give up her dominance, and eleanor came into the relationship feeling quite inferior. she had a terrible childhood, terrible. and s
let's start with sara delano roosevelt. >> a dominant woman, sara delano roosevelt. and in that picture, you can see that she's with her daughter-in-law elnor and with franklin. they were on their way to vote. now, they all looked smiley, but the tensions between sara and her daughter-in-law were there from the beginning, and they never were resolved. that was the most prickly relationship between mother and daughter-in-law. but she was such a dominant woman. put her whole life into her...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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WMPT
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no, that would apply to roosevelt, but not the others, and so, it'll cost you $4,001. you drop down to $4,799. let's go to leonard. he was smiling. i bet because he thinks he came up with the correct response, and he did. the state is virginia. $10,200 -- we'll have $10,200 added to it, putting him in the lead with $20,400 as we come to tori amos. $18,800 going into final, and she wrote down...virginia. did she risk more than a couple of thousand? , just $800. that takes her up to $19,600. very impressive. but, leonard, you're the automatic semi-finalist in this group. and i have a feeling tori's gonna be in the semi-finals, as well, with that score. the last of our quarterfinal games -- right here, tomorrow. please join us, won't you? so long. [ applause ] promotional consideration provided by... -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. mmmhmmm...everybody knows that. well, did you know that old macdonald was a really bad speller? your word is...cow. cow. cow. c...o...w... ...e...i...e...i...o. [buzzer] dangnabbit.
no, that would apply to roosevelt, but not the others, and so, it'll cost you $4,001. you drop down to $4,799. let's go to leonard. he was smiling. i bet because he thinks he came up with the correct response, and he did. the state is virginia. $10,200 -- we'll have $10,200 added to it, putting him in the lead with $20,400 as we come to tori amos. $18,800 going into final, and she wrote down...virginia. did she risk more than a couple of thousand? , just $800. that takes her up to $19,600. very...
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Jan 19, 2013
01/13
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it began with franklin roosevelt on march 4, 1933. when he wished to have a worship service take place before he took the oath of office, in the depths of the great depression. he contacted the church and he organized a special service with his former headmaster at school, who participated in the church with coming up with a special service. the have that service at st. john's that morning, and he felt that was a way to start. he wrote letters later on saying that he felt that he got his administration off to right footing by having the service at st. john's in march of 1933. it planted in the minds of people of this was a good thing to do. when roosevelt died, harry truman became president. when harry truman was inaugurated in 1949 after his election in 1948, he can say john's and had a pre inaugural worship service here. -- he came to st. john's and had a pre-inaugural worship service separat. other presidents have had pre- inaugural services. not necessarily at st. john's. but the tradition began here. it is one example of the asso
it began with franklin roosevelt on march 4, 1933. when he wished to have a worship service take place before he took the oath of office, in the depths of the great depression. he contacted the church and he organized a special service with his former headmaster at school, who participated in the church with coming up with a special service. the have that service at st. john's that morning, and he felt that was a way to start. he wrote letters later on saying that he felt that he got his...
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Jul 27, 2013
07/13
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roosevelt came bearing gifts. a transport plane because i'm shower motor vehicles weren't of much use. a transport plane. the king admired the president's wheelchair. he said you're very luck you to have your handlers and retapees push you around in a chair. i have us rate -- it rated legs and roosevelt gave the king his backup wheelchair. roosevelt had been warned by state department briefers be very careful about what gifts you receive and return from the king. the king has been known to offer people. a second arab wife. this -- mrs. roosevelt might have something to same also, the manifest for the summit meeting told roosevelt that the king would be bringing ten slaves with him, which in the context of the atlantic charter, was a little ambivalent, but at least the colonel eddie citiedded in convincing the d succeeded to convince the kinding to leave heirs hardem at home. we allowed the king to put his tents on the top of the ship. they slaughtered a goat during the travel. they -- we put on demonstrations of a
roosevelt came bearing gifts. a transport plane because i'm shower motor vehicles weren't of much use. a transport plane. the king admired the president's wheelchair. he said you're very luck you to have your handlers and retapees push you around in a chair. i have us rate -- it rated legs and roosevelt gave the king his backup wheelchair. roosevelt had been warned by state department briefers be very careful about what gifts you receive and return from the king. the king has been known to...
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113
Feb 12, 2013
02/13
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FBC
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eye 113
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view of the world. >> that is your view, you are like a teddy roosevelt-type republican is that fair to say? >> i say it works, republican party has a long history of accomplishments and ways that republican leaders have changed this country. neil: a core conservative group, when run for president, and your powerful roles in republican party over the years, but, i caught a piece today, you might have, in "new york times," a young montana voters, who are very much to the left liberal a lot of them a couple quoted their fondness for you, but. >> heaven forbid. neil: it was not enough you were not enough, and republicans by repudiating you, i'm over analyzing here, were not the necessary of that include all, bring in all. that will hurt republicans, what do you think of that? >> well, i think there is a fundamental shift occurring. in america. and you lose a younger demographic nile, 60-40 is a wake-up call, young kids, i am raising a couple of them, i talk every day about these issues, they want balance budgets, they want the economy that work, they wantob opportunities, and prosperous
view of the world. >> that is your view, you are like a teddy roosevelt-type republican is that fair to say? >> i say it works, republican party has a long history of accomplishments and ways that republican leaders have changed this country. neil: a core conservative group, when run for president, and your powerful roles in republican party over the years, but, i caught a piece today, you might have, in "new york times," a young montana voters, who are very much to the...
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Sep 26, 2013
09/13
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WGN
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eye 757
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he was a student at roosevelt but the student who did it did not attend. the freshman got out of school and was shot in the leg. there was a verbal altercation first at the bus stop at kimball and leland, they do not believe it was gang-related. after the argument the shooter pointed a gun at the head of the 15 year- old. he grabbed the gun and the shooter shot and hit him in the leg. the shooting happened after school let out at around 215. students i spoke to did not seem too concerned about it. it is something that happens in daily life and something we will get passed. it happened in a group of kids and i don't do that. chicago public schools spokesperson issued a statement saying the safety of our children is a top priority and all of the incident took place outside of school property, cps takes any kind of incident of this kind involving a student very seriously. no word on whether there will be extra precautions since this happened. the suspect is in his late teens or early 20s and he has not been charged yet. the youngest victim of last week's mass
he was a student at roosevelt but the student who did it did not attend. the freshman got out of school and was shot in the leg. there was a verbal altercation first at the bus stop at kimball and leland, they do not believe it was gang-related. after the argument the shooter pointed a gun at the head of the 15 year- old. he grabbed the gun and the shooter shot and hit him in the leg. the shooting happened after school let out at around 215. students i spoke to did not seem too concerned about...
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Oct 2, 2013
10/13
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MSNBC
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the party that i joined was the party of lincoln, the party of theodore roosevelt. the party of eisenhower. she's were patriots all. they were for one nation, indivisible. we have an insurrectionist, neoconfederate party that seems dedicated to all kinds of apocalyptic outcomes. i don't know if this comes from their fundamentalist religious outlook for whether it's just good fund-raising for them among their base, but they are no longer a normal political party. they are an insurrectionist party that is bringing down the government. >> okay. no longer a normal political party. i have heard a lot of commentators say this. i want to play devil as advocate and check my own biasses here, bruce. we had more shutdowns between tip o'neill and the democratic congress and reagan than we have now and there's some who argue a system like we have invest minority parties with a lot of power and so this is a natural system. what do you think of that? >> well, that's certainly true up to a point. but i think what we're really seeing here is a crisis of democracy, where one party b
the party that i joined was the party of lincoln, the party of theodore roosevelt. the party of eisenhower. she's were patriots all. they were for one nation, indivisible. we have an insurrectionist, neoconfederate party that seems dedicated to all kinds of apocalyptic outcomes. i don't know if this comes from their fundamentalist religious outlook for whether it's just good fund-raising for them among their base, but they are no longer a normal political party. they are an insurrectionist...
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Dec 9, 2013
12/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 78
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president. 75 years ago, president roosevelt signed the fair labor standards act written in part by senator hugo black of alabama who actually used -- sat at this desk as he was writing the minimum wage law and some of the fair labor standards act legislation in the 1930's. this legislation ensured that american workers would receive a minimum wage and work reasonable hours. we know what that's done for families in this country. we also know that the minimum wage hasn't even been close to keeping up with the cost of living, with inflation. we also know a number of other things, mr. president, about the minimum wage. minimum wage is now $7.25 an hour. many of -- many of minimum-wage workers working -- making $7.25 or $8 or $9 an hour -- less than we want to raise the minimum wage, too, so all would get a raise -- we know that many of those workers work in the fast-food industry. the c.e.o. of a fast-food corporation makes, we figure, about $8.7 million a year. while his average employees make something about around $19,000 a year. and i don't -- i'm not one of those that says, well, that's -
president. 75 years ago, president roosevelt signed the fair labor standards act written in part by senator hugo black of alabama who actually used -- sat at this desk as he was writing the minimum wage law and some of the fair labor standards act legislation in the 1930's. this legislation ensured that american workers would receive a minimum wage and work reasonable hours. we know what that's done for families in this country. we also know that the minimum wage hasn't even been close to...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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FBC
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john: it was teddy roosevelt who issued 1,000 executive orders. >> who said the words should be spelled phonetically like enough because only congress had the two-thirds vote did that not have been -- have been. >> when will the government get serious? >> massive inflation? there is a change of incentives. >> but to cut spending increase spending they have lobbying groups cannot but there needs to be something on the other side that 99 percent of testimony is for more spending. >> it is time for the advocacy organization to show there is a movement of people who care enough to vote. >> states all across the country have the same problems was spending the the lobbyist outnumber the voters at 10 /1. john: what does that mean? >> somebody who is paid to lobby for this state health care program, environmental office, state schools. >> and they are politically connected. if your affluent and connected you get part of the pie. >> disregarding the morality of the ethics is it more acceptable to break the law? property and lives are not lost. so give us the comparative a vantage. john: thank yo
john: it was teddy roosevelt who issued 1,000 executive orders. >> who said the words should be spelled phonetically like enough because only congress had the two-thirds vote did that not have been -- have been. >> when will the government get serious? >> massive inflation? there is a change of incentives. >> but to cut spending increase spending they have lobbying groups cannot but there needs to be something on the other side that 99 percent of testimony is for more...
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120
Dec 5, 2013
12/13
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MSNBCW
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eye 120
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at first it was a call in the wild from teddy roosevelt. then franklin really wanted to pursue it, but it was so emotional. he couldn't get it passed. there were pushbacks. truman tried, there were push backs. finally lbj with a huge mandate was able to get medicare and medicaid. he thought this was the first step towards complete single payer universal coverage. that didn't come to pass. but the issue --. richard nixon first entertained the idea of an individual mandate to get the private market . >> so we've seen both parties play into this. the other dynamic, though, that's fascinating is that democrats have picked up on this private sector approach that richard nixon started. >> robert, the approach we have is very unique, right? it's this public/private partnership. what are the costs and the benefits of that particular approach? >> so what we have is almost two systems together. we've spent almost as much as most other industrial countries on our private sector health care and almost as much on our public sector health care. and there
at first it was a call in the wild from teddy roosevelt. then franklin really wanted to pursue it, but it was so emotional. he couldn't get it passed. there were pushbacks. truman tried, there were push backs. finally lbj with a huge mandate was able to get medicare and medicaid. he thought this was the first step towards complete single payer universal coverage. that didn't come to pass. but the issue --. richard nixon first entertained the idea of an individual mandate to get the private...
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71
Dec 2, 2013
12/13
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CSPAN
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eye 71
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elected that roosevelt, the other roosevelt. elected reagan got because we were mired in a deep recession and he said we can have a better way. it all does get back to jobs and the party that can show you to hat they can get work, that they can improve your income, those are the ideas we need to promote. do you do that? well, you do it with regulation, you do it with tax cuts. training. with job you do it with real education that links people to the jobs today.xist now, beyond that, you can't ignore people who live in the shadows. that's the heart. somebody is mentally ill, you tragedy in virginia yesterday. illness, drug addiction, working poor. you can't get people stuck on other side of the bridge to prosperity. we have to build a strong economy with the tools that it takes. we can debate those all day long. if you don't have balanced me tell you, alex, said if people in washington can't balance the budget, they can't understand common sense. a virtue and a value. if you can't create strong jobs, ou can't ignore the people wh
elected that roosevelt, the other roosevelt. elected reagan got because we were mired in a deep recession and he said we can have a better way. it all does get back to jobs and the party that can show you to hat they can get work, that they can improve your income, those are the ideas we need to promote. do you do that? well, you do it with regulation, you do it with tax cuts. training. with job you do it with real education that links people to the jobs today.xist now, beyond that, you can't...
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50
Nov 30, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 50
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we had a discussion about woodrow wilson and feel roosevelt. wilson used to go to the president's room in congress and when asked about how gridlock, how things get moving one of the suggestions from the other speaker was maybe the president should be using find that room. another suggestion that has been -- i wonder if you caught what the president could do to be more engaged with congress. another idea that has been floated in that panel was the idea that members are spending so much of their time raising money, in addition to what you spoke about, not living in washington which was also discussed is this idea that they go home. the question is is there some campaign finance solution we could put in place? >> the president's room is on the senate side of the capital. that question i assume is more symbolic of the larger question what can president obama specifically do to engage congress more. i think fold notion and criticism of president obama that is out there that he is not engaging with congress is pretty overwrought. he can have all the
we had a discussion about woodrow wilson and feel roosevelt. wilson used to go to the president's room in congress and when asked about how gridlock, how things get moving one of the suggestions from the other speaker was maybe the president should be using find that room. another suggestion that has been -- i wonder if you caught what the president could do to be more engaged with congress. another idea that has been floated in that panel was the idea that members are spending so much of their...
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87
Nov 6, 2013
11/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 87
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this is well captured by theodore roosevelt. he said practical equality of opportunity for all citizens when we achieve it has two great results. first, every man will have a fair chance to make of himself all that in him lies to reach the highest point to which his capacities unassisted by special privilege of his own, unhampered by the special privilege of others can carry him, to get for himself and his family substantially what he has earned. second, theodore roosevelt continued, equality of opportunity means that the commonwealth will get from every citizen the highest service of which he is capable. no man who carries the burden of the special privileges of another can give to the commonwealth that service to which it is fairly entitled. so theodore roosevelt was speaking in the masculine but he was talking about all citizens, men and women, equality of opportunity for the individual and for the benefit of society. senator ted kennedy summarized this concept much more succinctly. he did so on august 5 of 2009 when the bill
this is well captured by theodore roosevelt. he said practical equality of opportunity for all citizens when we achieve it has two great results. first, every man will have a fair chance to make of himself all that in him lies to reach the highest point to which his capacities unassisted by special privilege of his own, unhampered by the special privilege of others can carry him, to get for himself and his family substantially what he has earned. second, theodore roosevelt continued, equality...
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Feb 1, 2013
02/13
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MSNBCW
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a simple search shows a teddy roosevelt figure hunting tigers, diving for treasure and hang gliding with endangered species. now he is adding another notch to his resume. according to the telegraph, he hired the r&b group boys to men as spokesman to promote the country's nationwide fertility campaign. this wasn't his first idea to help boost the birthrate. he's previously offered out cash payments and gifts to new mornlgz and even declared national holidays for baby making. we call it new year's eve here in the states. >>> there's a fight brewing in new jersey over the senate seat. currently held by frank lautenberg. he didn't announce his plans after he determined that they would assume the 90-year-old senator will retire. corey booker has thrown his hat into the ring and now booker may have a challenger. listen up. geraldo rivera. yes, that geraldo, said on his radio show yesterday that he's truly contemplating his run for the senate seat in 2014. we here at "way too early" think he would be fantastic. at least we know he can hold his own in a debate. >> the taliban spokesman is on the
a simple search shows a teddy roosevelt figure hunting tigers, diving for treasure and hang gliding with endangered species. now he is adding another notch to his resume. according to the telegraph, he hired the r&b group boys to men as spokesman to promote the country's nationwide fertility campaign. this wasn't his first idea to help boost the birthrate. he's previously offered out cash payments and gifts to new mornlgz and even declared national holidays for baby making. we call it new...
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184
Mar 25, 2013
03/13
by
KGO
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eye 184
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they went to roosevelt beach where the two played soccer. then the unexpected happened when lopez went into the water. >> you go in the beach and when they start looking for him. >> emergency crews say the water was relatively calm, but there was swift currents that could have played a role. >> they dropped a data boui in to see which way the curve conditions were going and which way she would be going and they are doing a pattern from there. >> crews from the coast guard and san mateo county coast guard and cal fire and the state department of parks and recreation all went looking for lopez. but afterrarily five hours they called -- after nearly five hours they called off the search. this is is from the staff. the owner is praying a miracle. lopez was like a son to her. >> i hope he go somewhere and can come back. i wish. i hope. praise the god to help him to be back. >> the coast guard says there are no plans to resume the search. he had family in oregon and they are said to be on their way. lilian kim, abc7 news. >> lilian, thank you. >>>
they went to roosevelt beach where the two played soccer. then the unexpected happened when lopez went into the water. >> you go in the beach and when they start looking for him. >> emergency crews say the water was relatively calm, but there was swift currents that could have played a role. >> they dropped a data boui in to see which way the curve conditions were going and which way she would be going and they are doing a pattern from there. >> crews from the coast...
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114
Jan 13, 2013
01/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 114
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indeed throughout his life was francis much like a lot of roosevelt whose defend her husband's backbone and encouraged his idealism pressing him to consider what should be done rather than what could be done. but in the end, while the idea gave seward great emotional stress, he did what he had to do to follow his ambition which led to a memorable career. i think one of my favorite moments is to picture him on may 18th 1860 s he is awaiting the news that he has been given the republican nomination at the chicago convention so certain was he that he would win and hundreds of people that walked to his home to the festivities that were set to begin once the news came. banners were stretched, restaurants were stocked with food, champagne uncorked, it can then driven to his house to be set off. perhaps the champagne was an ominous sign because rimmer in 1986 the world series between the red sox and the new york mets we uncorked the champagne thinking we were going to win minutes before the ball went through his legs and of course be ending had a very different way of expressing itself and i w
indeed throughout his life was francis much like a lot of roosevelt whose defend her husband's backbone and encouraged his idealism pressing him to consider what should be done rather than what could be done. but in the end, while the idea gave seward great emotional stress, he did what he had to do to follow his ambition which led to a memorable career. i think one of my favorite moments is to picture him on may 18th 1860 s he is awaiting the news that he has been given the republican...
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160
Mar 25, 2013
03/13
by
KGO
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eye 160
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they went to roosevelt beach where the two played soccer. then the unexpected happened when lopez went into the water. >> you go in the beach and when they start looking for him. >> emergency crews say the water was relatively calm, but there was swift currents that could have played a role. >> they dropped a data boui in to see which way the curve conditions were going and which way she would be going and they are doing a pattern from there. >> crews from the coast guard and san mateo county coast guard and cal fire and the state department of parks and recreation all went looking for lopez. but afterrarily five hours they called -- after nearly five hours they called off the search. this is is from the staff. the owner is praying a miracle. lopez was like a son to her. >> i hope he go somewhere and can come back. i wish. i hope. praise the god to help him to be back. >> the coast guard says there are no plans to resume the search. he had family in oregon and they are said to be on their way. lilian kim, abc7 news. >> lilian, thank you. >>>
they went to roosevelt beach where the two played soccer. then the unexpected happened when lopez went into the water. >> you go in the beach and when they start looking for him. >> emergency crews say the water was relatively calm, but there was swift currents that could have played a role. >> they dropped a data boui in to see which way the curve conditions were going and which way she would be going and they are doing a pattern from there. >> crews from the coast...
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67
Feb 13, 2013
02/13
by
WUSA
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eye 67
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same story on 66 inbound to the roosevelt bridge and 295 to the 11th. back to you guys. >> thanks, monika. >>> if your company doesn't have a website, google wants to get you one. they held a get your business on-line seminar in d.c. yesterday. business owners got a free website and some training on how to do it. >> we're also getting them on the map. when you look for their kind of business, then you get a little -- a map and a pin that shows them where that business is and what their phone number is. >> that doesn't hurt, right? that manual right there says -- man right there says 58% of all small businesses don't have a website. >>> the murder-suicide of university of -- at the university of maryland may have you concerned if you have a child in college or one headed there. >> so how would you know if your child was in a really bad roommate situation? peggy fox has some answers from george mason university. >> reporter: for many students heading off to college for the first time, it's a worry wondering who their roommate will be. but these two freshm
same story on 66 inbound to the roosevelt bridge and 295 to the 11th. back to you guys. >> thanks, monika. >>> if your company doesn't have a website, google wants to get you one. they held a get your business on-line seminar in d.c. yesterday. business owners got a free website and some training on how to do it. >> we're also getting them on the map. when you look for their kind of business, then you get a little -- a map and a pin that shows them where that business is...
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56
Oct 17, 2013
10/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 56
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we continue our series live on monday as we look at first lady eleanor roosevelt. journal"ngton continues. host: a live shot of the memorial where you saw barricades during the shutdown. more people visiting at monuments have opened as the federal government has reopened and people are heading back to work in washington, d.c. for our final hour, your calls on the end of the shutdown, the extension of the debt limit and related issues. (202) 585-3881 is the line for republicans. (202) 585-3880 is the line for democrats. (202) 585-3882 four independent -- for independents. and we have set aside a line for federal workers. if you want to give us a call about what has happened, it is (202) 585-3883. again, the congress passing the debt bill, the government reopening. the story is reflected in the papers. we want to hear mainly from you concerning your thoughts over what you have seen the last 2 1/2 weeks. just to give you a flavor of how some of the papers have played it out, the editorial page of "the new york times," this is their take. "the republicans surrender aft
we continue our series live on monday as we look at first lady eleanor roosevelt. journal"ngton continues. host: a live shot of the memorial where you saw barricades during the shutdown. more people visiting at monuments have opened as the federal government has reopened and people are heading back to work in washington, d.c. for our final hour, your calls on the end of the shutdown, the extension of the debt limit and related issues. (202) 585-3881 is the line for republicans. (202)...
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185
Jul 23, 2013
07/13
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MSNBCW
tv
eye 185
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the first opened in 1940 for president roosevelt, still president at the time. the newest opened this summer for president bush, in texas. all the presidential library system covers presidents since hoover. what about the first presidents. countless presidential materials have been lost or destroyed. although many presidential papers divided up between historical societies and libraries. many exist throughout the country today but can often take years to get funding and gather materials. for instance, abc ham lincoln's opened in 2005, 140 years after his assassination. the longest wait still belongs to the country's first president who finally gets his first library near his home in mt. vernon. the fred w. smith library for the study of george washington will open in september and house thousands of books, journals and other materials on president george washington and his work. located on 14 acres by the mt. vernon he state, culmination of 150 years effort to restore washington's personal library collection. joining me now is president of the george washington
the first opened in 1940 for president roosevelt, still president at the time. the newest opened this summer for president bush, in texas. all the presidential library system covers presidents since hoover. what about the first presidents. countless presidential materials have been lost or destroyed. although many presidential papers divided up between historical societies and libraries. many exist throughout the country today but can often take years to get funding and gather materials. for...
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168
Jan 20, 2013
01/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 168
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franklin roosevelt only gave 30 fireside chats in 12 years. he understood instinctively the dangers of overexposure. he also controlled the media to an extent that modern presidents could not hope to. host: looking back, fdr broke the unwritten code of serving more than two terms. wetoday's modern age, could have more than two terms for any president? you worked for ronald reagan. if his health was better, of third term? guest: i doubt it. he talked about it after he left office. he was going to campaign for appeal of that amendment. he thought the american people should be able to vote for anyone wanted to vote for. it is very difficult to imagine after eight years of office -- we've used up our presidents. that is why this string of two- term presidents is really so unusual. we have a string of one-term presidencies before that. that became the norm. host: let me share with ronald reagan said in january of 1987. his state of the union address. [video clip] >> i have one major regret. i took a risk with our action in regards to iran. it did n
franklin roosevelt only gave 30 fireside chats in 12 years. he understood instinctively the dangers of overexposure. he also controlled the media to an extent that modern presidents could not hope to. host: looking back, fdr broke the unwritten code of serving more than two terms. wetoday's modern age, could have more than two terms for any president? you worked for ronald reagan. if his health was better, of third term? guest: i doubt it. he talked about it after he left office. he was going...
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359
Jan 27, 2013
01/13
by
WGN
tv
eye 359
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mccaffery interests want to build a for- profit school on land just north north of a mixed-use project at roosevelt road and wells street. british school with campuses in other cities... already has a school near halsted and eastman street in the clybourn corridor shopping district on chicago's north side. dozens of legal permanent residents who want to become u.s. citizens received help today with their applications. it was hosted by the new american's initiative. it brought together several organizations with lawyers to provide assistance to people filling out citizenship applications and free legal screenings for eligible immigrants >> after 40 years on capitol hill, one long serving senator says his time has come. next, one of the senate's last old-guard liberals decides not to run again. also ahead, our restaurant critic checks out a new spot putting an asian twist on the rush street nightlife scene. and later, it's that time of year again when some brave souls take on the icy deep of lake michigan. illinois lotetery drawing... pick 3... 3 2 8 pick 4... 7 6 1 4 lucky day lotto... 30 34 1 38 24
mccaffery interests want to build a for- profit school on land just north north of a mixed-use project at roosevelt road and wells street. british school with campuses in other cities... already has a school near halsted and eastman street in the clybourn corridor shopping district on chicago's north side. dozens of legal permanent residents who want to become u.s. citizens received help today with their applications. it was hosted by the new american's initiative. it brought together several...
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55
Jan 29, 2013
01/13
by
WUSA
tv
eye 55
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this -- roosevelt bridge. this time virginia on the northbound side of 95. you have the slow stuff in woodbridge and lorton and then here in springfield heading over to the beltway. then the pace improves till you get to duke street. a live look outside one more time. first on the american legion bridge on the west side of town, things look good here. one last look on our vdot camera heading for the 14th street bridge. just slow across the bridge spanning. more traffic in a few minutes but first back to you. >> thanks, monika. >>> we've been combing through the day's daily deals. there are plenty of bargains for big screens leading up to sewall bowl sunday. how about 400 bucks off a toshiba50-inch led television from tiger direct. regular price $899.99. right now it's available for only $499. while you're at it, you know you're going to need a grill for that party. k-mart is offering up to 40% off its gas grills right now. you're going to have to feed all of the guests so it's a good thing omaha steaks has cut the price of its start the party sampler. regula
this -- roosevelt bridge. this time virginia on the northbound side of 95. you have the slow stuff in woodbridge and lorton and then here in springfield heading over to the beltway. then the pace improves till you get to duke street. a live look outside one more time. first on the american legion bridge on the west side of town, things look good here. one last look on our vdot camera heading for the 14th street bridge. just slow across the bridge spanning. more traffic in a few minutes but...
94
94
Dec 1, 2013
12/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 94
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it is jobs that elected roosevelt, the other roosevelt reagan got elected because we were mired in a deep, deep, deep recession and he said we can have a better way. but it all gets back to jobs and the party that can show people that can get you to work, that they can improve your income, those are the ideas that we need to promote. so how do you do it? cuts. it with job, tax beyond that, you can't ignore people who live in the shadows. that's the heart. somebody is mentally ill -- you saw that tragedy in virginia yesterday. mental illness, drug addiction, working poor. you can't let people get stuck on the other side of the bridge to prosperity. so we've got to build a strong economy with the tools that it takes and we can debate those all day long. if you don't have balanced budgets -- let me tell you, my dad carried mail on his back. he would tell you, if those people can't balance the budget, they don't understand common sense. but beyond that when you create the strong jobs you can't ignore people who want to get across the bridge to share in the bounty of america. sometimes in
it is jobs that elected roosevelt, the other roosevelt reagan got elected because we were mired in a deep, deep, deep recession and he said we can have a better way. but it all gets back to jobs and the party that can show people that can get you to work, that they can improve your income, those are the ideas that we need to promote. so how do you do it? cuts. it with job, tax beyond that, you can't ignore people who live in the shadows. that's the heart. somebody is mentally ill -- you saw...
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Mar 3, 2013
03/13
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KRCB
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teddy roosevelt even, who is probably one of the most devoutly religious presidents we ever had. he tried to get "in god we trust" off the coinage. and he was attacked by the then religious right, this religious president, for being atheist. the reason teddy roosevelt wanted god off the coins ithe government in his view had no business putting god on money, putting god and maman together. so we really see how many of these issues that ingersoll was dealing with, they mirror the things today. we have no spokesman like ingersoll. and while we have many spokesmen atheists, we don't have anybody who is part of sort of the regular public fabric of the nation who talks about these things from all formats all the time, not in terms of -- i never debates about the existence of god. why would you do tha who are you going to convince? i like to talk about public issues. but we don't have an ingersoll somebody who's that well-known and important, who will come out and talk about the relationship of religion to public issues in this way. >> how do young people respond to you when you say, "i
teddy roosevelt even, who is probably one of the most devoutly religious presidents we ever had. he tried to get "in god we trust" off the coinage. and he was attacked by the then religious right, this religious president, for being atheist. the reason teddy roosevelt wanted god off the coins ithe government in his view had no business putting god on money, putting god and maman together. so we really see how many of these issues that ingersoll was dealing with, they mirror the things...
83
83
May 28, 2013
05/13
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CSPAN
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we will be focusing on eleanor roosevelt on monday, october 21. let's go to deborah, new york, independent. thank you for waiting. caller: good morning. congratulations on your publication. guest: thank you. 'sller: as far as obama management style and being in the so-called bubble, have you considered that for the first four years he was literally underwater, dealing with problems that were passed on from the previous administration? that would have a whole lot to do with the perception by other people. guest: i do talk about that in hadbook, that he has terrible collapses. the mortgage industry, the sense that we were headed for another depression, not just a recession. a terrible series of problems he inherited. and of course he inherited two wars. i am not minimizing bad at all, afghanistan and iraq. so he was faced with crises from the very beginning that he had to deal with. i do acknowledge that. but i think that any president in dealing with crises, it is important to keep a sense of the pulse of the country. i didn't want to give the impr
we will be focusing on eleanor roosevelt on monday, october 21. let's go to deborah, new york, independent. thank you for waiting. caller: good morning. congratulations on your publication. guest: thank you. 'sller: as far as obama management style and being in the so-called bubble, have you considered that for the first four years he was literally underwater, dealing with problems that were passed on from the previous administration? that would have a whole lot to do with the perception by...
62
62
Feb 23, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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through a distinctly american experiences, so much so that not even politicians as savvy as franklin roosevelt or lyndon johnson were able to pull them out completely. unfortunately, there is no guarantees that these writs will persist in america. economic cultures are like plants. once you tear them up from their roots they tend to die very quickly. creating the values that promote market economic cultures, let alone the institutions that enhance and protect them is extremely difficult. history is littered with failures to do so. americans can, however, cultivate what they have been given. as the founders said come as a sacred trust. the heritage of which is granted deeply in love we shared unashamedly called european civilization. if americans choose to do so, and acting tuesday must, americans can have confidence that whatever happens to your kaj if we choose -- make the right decisions at the level of attitudes and beliefs and expectations, whatever happens to europe, something of western civilization will not just have been saved. i think it will also have been transformed a new. thank yo
through a distinctly american experiences, so much so that not even politicians as savvy as franklin roosevelt or lyndon johnson were able to pull them out completely. unfortunately, there is no guarantees that these writs will persist in america. economic cultures are like plants. once you tear them up from their roots they tend to die very quickly. creating the values that promote market economic cultures, let alone the institutions that enhance and protect them is extremely difficult....